Title: Co-founded and Convened By:
1Co-founded and Convened By
2A Season for Nonviolence is a 64 day educational,
media and grassroots campaign inspired by the
50th and 30th memorial anniversaries of Mahatma
Gandhi and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
3Co-founded in 1998 by the Association for Global
New Thought (AGNT) and Arun and Sunanda Gandhi,
SNV is now in its 18th year.
4- The campaign is convened and directed by the
Association for Global New Thought. Co-leaders
and advocates include many distinguished authors
and teachers of peace and nonviolence.
Dolores Huerta Bro. David Steindl-rast
Dr. Lawrence Carter
Dr. Bernard Lafayette
Dr. Michael Bernard Beckwith
5- Spiritually-motivated spiritual leaders and
grassroots volunteers in over 900 cities in 67
countries implement sustainable programs and
events each year.
6- Celebrating a decade of SNV in 2007 aboard the
Gandhi King Peace Train with family members of
Gandhi, King, and Cesar E. Chavez, activist
Dolores Huerta accepted the invitation to honor
Chavez name for his work in nonviolent social
change.
7- SNV has been launched at the United Nations each
year from 1998 through 2015. The theme for last
year's student-based program was - "Global Peace Through
Social Media - There's an APP
for That!"
8- Our purpose is to create an awareness of
nonviolent principles and practice as a powerful
way to heal, transform and empower our lives and
communities.
9- Through an educational and community action
campaign, we honor those who use nonviolence to
build a community that honors the dignity and
worth of every human being.
10- Omni-local IS Global. A Season for Nonviolence
represents the successful new model of
omni-local conscious action - Engaging large numbers of self-empowered
leaders and groups in a common goal using their
own local resources to work globally with
singular purpose.
11- By identifying what works in these new
models for reconciliation and human harmony, we
are demonstrating that every person can move the
world in the direction of peace through his or
her daily nonviolent choice and action.
12SNV 1998-2015 Our Collaboratory for
Spiritually-Motivated Social ActionThe Season
for Nonviolence is successful because we all take
responsibility, as a whole, for being the
change we wish to see in the world.
We call our community together.... Churches and
centers form task forces Individuals meet among
friends or sought out other groups We stand on
a foundation of prayer and meditation, rooted in
nonviolence We invite others from different
religions, cultures, ideologies, and professions
into a nonjudgmental, inclusive dialogue... we
share our stories We study common educational
and training materials, developed resources, ask
questions, share wisdom, learn from one
another We become social strategists and
organizational designers at a high level of
competence not because we adopt a hierarchy,
but because we uncover our collective gifts
through a process of emergence We bring our
programs and projects in front of decision- and
policy- makers, local media, Boards of Education,
and more We communicate our successes and
challenges within our communities, and also to
the central hub coordinating Season for
Nonviolence so that our work can be shared as
templates with others, reducing our collective
learning curve greatly
13A New Meme is Established
As a result of this deep and sustained
dedication, a new model for omni-local,
spiritually-based peace governance has emerged
successfully, igniting entire communities. The
Gandhi King Gyatso Season for Nonviolence project
has evolved through our collective, exemplary
leadership in more than 900 cities in the U.S.
and 67 other countries during the past ten
Seasons. AGNTs spiritually-based model for
nonviolence has seeded peace-building communities
that integrate vision and action. We know that
the key to empowerment is compassionate visionary
consciousness coupled with enlightened choices
toward action.
14The Embracing of LeadershipWhat We Have Learned
It has been said that, If you want peace, work
for justice. This quote is attributed to Pope
Paul VI. Through dedicated prayer, research,
education, planning, team-building, dialogue,
logistics, fundraising, and successful
implementation of events and programs promoting
nonviolent personal and social transformation, we
have identified common factors that are at the
root of all peace-building
15The Embracing of LeadershipWhat We Have Learned
Compassion/understanding/forgiveness/acceptance
Positive interfaith and intercultural
relationships Omni-local IS global Connection
is critical both psychologically and
organizationally Education/awareness is key to
resolving conflict Sharing our wisdom with
others, and benefiting from others experience,
are equally important Along with rights, come
responsibilities Each one of us is VERY
powerful together we are more powerful than
alone serving a larger vision and Source as a
unified humanity is infallible We create change
by living the change. If we are consistent in our
consciousness, we are already doing it.
16His-Holiness, the Dalai Lama of Tibetin a
personal conversation with Brother Wayne
TeasdaleSeptember 16, 1997 Dharamsala, India
- I believe this is the right time to promote
nonviolence in various ways and means. And it is
our responsibility to do so. Both Gandhi and
Martin Luther King are inspiring examples of the
power and truth of nonviolence and the actions
that arise from them. They not only embraced
nonviolence in principle, but implemented it in
action. Both gave their lives for this precious
vision.
This Season for Nonviolence is a very good tool
to remind us of their witness, but also of the
large unfinished work we have together in
transforming awareness on our planet."
17"I fully endorse the Season for Nonviolence, an
important step towards a century and millennium
of nonviolence which should be proclaimed by the
United Nations during the world celebration of
the year 2000." - Dr. Robert Muller
(1923-2010), Chancellor of the UN University of
Peace former Assistant Secretary General to the
UN
18"In the 'Season for Nonviolence' Initiative, the
Association for Global New Thought has made a
significant contribution to creating a more
compassionate and peaceful world by educating
people in the principles of nonviolence advocated
by Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Jr. and
other peacemakers." - Coretta Scott King
19FEATURED PROGRAMS2015
20FEATURED PROGRAMS
Honoring Nelson Mandela (1918-2013)
21FEATURED PROGRAMS
64 Ways to Practice Nonviolence
22FEATURED PROGRAMS
64 Days Each day for 64 days, thoughts for the
Season on FaceBook AGNT.org.
23FEATURED PROGRAMS
Ethics for the New Millennium Study Course
24FEATURED PROGRAMS
25FEATURED PROGRAMS
26FEATURED PROGRAMS
27Get started now
www.seasonfornonviolence.com