[Dialogue] Fwd: The Last Chapter
carletonstock at aol.com
carletonstock at aol.com
Wed Apr 29 12:44:38 PDT 2020
Thank you Alton for sending out these incredible and deserved tributes to Sally and Charles! Very moving and heartfelt. Thank God for the saints of the movement! With my environmental hat on, I wanted to put a plug in for Green Burial as an option for burials of the saints. Maybe it could be included in the Last Chapter work somewhere. It honors the person, the family and colleagues, and the Earth. Many cities and towns have provision for this kind of burial now that avoids the sterile and unnecessary procedures of modern day funerals. Green Burial restores the natural values of returning our loved one to the Earth without all the concrete and fake grass! Worth looking into. Joe Matthews would have loved it! Thanks again for sending these meditations out!Carleton StockSt. Louis -----Original Message-----
From: Richard Alton via Dialogue <dialogue at lists.wedgeblade.net>
To: Colleague Dialogue <dialogue at lists.wedgeblade.net>
Cc: Richard Alton <richard.alton at gmail.com>
Sent: Wed, Apr 29, 2020 11:01 am
Subject: [Dialogue] Fwd: The Last Chapter
Dear Colleagues, below is the ICA Appreciation given by ICA's staff person Seva Gandhi at Sally Stovall Memorial Service on May 25, 2019. As part of the Last Chapter work we will be celebrating the lives of our late colleagues over the next month.
DickThe Institute of Cultural Affairs exists today because of dedicated people who decided to live their lives on behalf of something bigger than themselves. Individuals who decided to operate out of a different value system than the world was accustomed to, and to demonstrate with their lives that that which
seemed impossible, was in fact, possible.Today we celebrate Sally Stovall, a dedicated and fierce leader who helped ICA realize its mission to ‘create a just and equitable society.’ Throughout the 70’s and 80’s, Sally worked in a variety of roles and places for ICA - from Development Staff to Project Manager and Director, sharing her gifts and talents on behalf of the organization in Louisiana, South Dakota, Washington, New York and Taiwan. In the past decade, as ICA’s mission was amended to include ‘in harmony with planet earth,’ something Sally was already so clearly devoted to, she became a key supporter in our initiative toward Solar energy, and a trusted partner on all things sustainability-related.ICA recently went through an exercise to distill the core values of our organization. I share these, because organizational values do not live on a shelf somewhere but rather in the actions and souls of those who have shaped the institution and continue to live out its mission every day. Sally exemplified these values ICA holds up in a way few others are able.The value of Continuous Learning – Sally was never afraid to challenge herself, learn something new, or be honest about what she did not know. She was curious without being skeptical, and always willing to learn something new from anyone who was willing to share.The value of Facilitative Leadership – This value is extremely difficult to embody - but Sally seemed to do it with such ease and grace. Sally’s leadership looked so different from being front and center that it might have been unrecognized to those who weren’t paying close attention. She was great about being a ‘guide on the side’ instead of a ‘sage on the stage’. She worked tirelessly to support others to take action on the change they were seeking as many of you who worked with her have likely experienced.The value of Equity as a way to create a more just world. Sally had a deep commitment to inclusion and accessibility, and was on a journey of doing the hard work of internal inquiry and exploration to understand her unique role and place in creating a more just system.The value of Collaboration. Sally seemed to defy the adage If you want to go quickly, go alone, but if you want to go far, go together-- She was somehow clever enough to get everyone to go far, quickly, together.And lastly, the value of Spirit. Of being present and connected to those around you and giving of everything you have on behalf of something greater than yourself. Sally shared her spirit, her laugh and her being generously, and we are forever different because of it. We will always be grateful for Sally, and her spirit will be with us as we continue her legacy.The question the ICA posed to Sally over 50 years ago, was ‘What will you DO with your unique and unrepeatable life’, and we can see Sally’s answer clearly through her mission and work. And I bet, Sally would like nothing more than for us all to ponder, what will we do with our unique and unrepeatable life, and how are we willing to actively, not passively -make the change we know the world so desperately needs.
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Richard H. T. AltonOne Earth Film Fest ( OEFF)Green Community ConnectionsInterfaith Green NetworkT: 773.344.7172richard.alton at gmail.com*Save the Date! One Earth Film Festival 2021, March http:http://www.oneearthfilmfestival.org/
Make Plain the Vision, Habakkuh 2:2Won't you be my neighbor?
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Richard H. T. AltonOne Earth Film Fest ( OEFF)Green Community ConnectionsInterfaith Green NetworkT: 773.344.7172richard.alton at gmail.com*Save the Date! One Earth Film Festival 2021, March http:http://www.oneearthfilmfestival.org/
Make Plain the Vision, Habakkuh 2:2Won't you be my neighbor?_______________________________________________
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