Monday, June 16, 7pm: Peace & Justice Conversations: Fierce Vulnerability for Nonviolent Social Change
In times of collapse, we need a movement that recognizes injustice as a reflection of collective trauma and embraces its role as a catalyst for collective healing through transformative action. From political polarization leading to the erosion of the democratic process to the climate crisis continuing to perpetuate racial inequity, we need changes that heal harms at the personal and systemic levels. In Fierce Vulnerability, activist and author Kazu Haga argues that our binary worldview (“us vs. them,” “right vs. wrong”) is at the heart of what is destroying our relationships and our planet. Haga offers a new way to create healing by combining the time-honored lineage of nonviolent action with the sciences of trauma healing and the promises of spiritual practice.
Kazu Haga is a trainer and practitioner of nonviolence and restorative justice with over 25 years of experience in nonviolence and social change work. He is the author of Healing Resistance: A Radically Different Response to Harm and Fierce Vulnerability: Healing from Trauma, Emerging through Collapse. He works with incarcerated people, youth, and activists from around the country. He is a resident of the Canticle Farm community on Lisjan Ohlone land, Oakland, CA, where he lives with his family. You can find out more about his work at www.kazuhaga.com