Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Central Park Inspiration?

Leavenworth, WA - The best images I've found celebrating the goal of sustainability as the Tricircle Program seeks to articulate it, are located, of all places, in Central Park, New York. And they are beautiful! Take a look!






A tricircle, nestled within a circle...

...cradles a bird on her nest, secure in the leafy branches of a tree.










A different bird wings its way across what has to be a clear, blue sky...







...while others flock to the safety and shelter of some tree branches while, I'm sure, embracing life in song.





Artist celebrates in stone what Tricircle Program aspires to enact in life. That within a world embraced by the Godhead of Creator, Savior and Sustainer (symbolized by the tricircle image), creation rejoices in birth, flight and song, thriving because faithful people, loving God, choose to live profitably on the earth while caring for people and planet (the 3P's, also symbolized by the tricircle image). [For more thoughts on this please read...]

And so...
...the tricircle of the divine Godhead...Father, Son and Holy Spirit...Creator, Savior and Sustainer...
...joins the tricircle of sustainable earth...people, planet, and profit...economy, ecology and equity...
...within the circle-vision of God's Kingdom that has no beginning and no end,
...to unite heaven and earth that all creation might sing.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

New York - Greening the Future

New York City - Having just returned from an emerging ecovillage in South Africa that is striving to be truly committed to sustainable living, New York was a world of contrasts. Touring this world famous city took me from a world-first "green" building at Gqunube Green ecovillage (see architecture award received October 2009) to the world-first buildings of the Big Apple. And there they were in all their splendor - the Empire State Building, the New York Stock Exchange and, just up the street, Trinity Church, the only Anglican church in the U.S.A. where the Queen worships when on this side of the pond. Each building is impressive....massive edifices drawing on the very best of human skill and ingenuity in their design and construction. Each represents power...business, financial, ecclesiastical. But as symbols there was a sense each offers more of the same...a doomed way of life that would continue the world's mad race toward a future both unsustainable and inelegant in it's inability to live lightly on the earth.

New York...exciting, vibrant and glamorous in many ways, but offering more of the same...a one way ticket to a state of endless imbalance that will only cost society ever more in its' quest for a meaningful quality of life.

And then it happened. I visited a building that inspired hope and restored my faith in humanity's ingenuity and ability to change course. Here was a building that Ayn Rand herself would credit with the boldness and vision of architect Howard Roark, not because of a misguided trust in "man's" ego, but rather because of the courage the building represents to break with convention in the design of buildings that matter.

According to Wikipedia, "Hearst Tower is the first green building completed in New York City, with a number of environmental considerations built into the plan. The floor of the atrium is paved with heat conducive limestone. Polyethylene tubing is embedded under the floor and filled with water for circulating cooling in the summer and heating in the winter. Rain collected on the roof is stored in a tank in the basement for use in the cooling system, to irrigate plants and for the water sculpture in the main lobby. The building was constructed using 80% recycled steel. Overall, the building has been designed to use 25% less energy than the minimum requirements for the city of New York, and earned a gold designation from the United States Green Building Council's LEED certification program."


As the world headquarters of the Hearst Corporation, the Hearst Tower is 46 storeys of architectural inspiration. But we all know that a green building is only one of the 48 patterns making up a sustainable world. It remains to be seen how the Hearst Corporation, outside of its' green headquarters, demonstrates a commitment to the other 47 patterns in its daily business and editorial practices. Does it promote a lifestyle of living Profitably on the earth while simultaneously caring for People and Planet (3P decision making)?

In a sense perhaps the challenge is the same for both Gqunube Green and the Hearst Corporation. Both have a green building...but can both now match, and sustain, lifestyle with architecture? I hope the Tricircle Program, with gentle vigor, might facilitate this process at Gqunube Green!

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Letter to Leavenworth, Washington #2

Durban, South Africa - Leaving a rugby game on the television - South Africa against New Zealand - I boarded the plane for Durban just as the Springboks had taken the lead. Clear skies offered a beautiful view of the Transkei region beneath me as I left Gqunube Green behind after a time of refreshing for my soul. The Tricircle Pavilion had truly invited me on that "journey inward" and I was able to allow God to minister to my own soul even as I was exposed again to life in a country facing so many challenges.

Having "journeyed inward" I found myself reflecting on opportunities this ecovillage offered for the "journey outward." Through the Serv-fari 2007 group from Leavenworth UMC, links had been established with the impoverished township of Mzamomhle. Since then considerable financial support from various sources has been given to CATCH, an organization doing some truly wonderful work primarily with the youth of this peri-urban area across the river from the ecovillage. This is a wonderful move that will help Gqunube Green live into its' sustainability mission - to live for profit, people and planet simultaneously (or, put another way, to invest in economic, social and ecological capital of the region at the same time).



Brianne Vincent's senior project of raising funds for CATCH by asking members of the congregation to sponsor the local Kodiak soccer team, gave me reason to visit this project once again. Doing so put me back in touch with Francis Bosman and introduced me to one of the pastors who is on CATCH's staff. Both of them are involved in food production at CATCH, something the organization would like to do more of.



On the last day of my stay at Gqunube Green, Francis and this pastor visited with me at the ecovillage, and we explored how this might happen. We are considering starting with solar cookers. The CATCH Center does regular food preparation and thought is being given to modeling cooking with solar cookers as a first step towards guaging if this technology is of interest and use to the poor folk in the township who really can't afford the high costs of electricity and kerosene. Should the technology prove useful it might be that Gqunube Green Learning Center can train a local member of the community to manufacture these solar cookers to sell to the residents of the township and so start a small business - an example of a Triple P decision as people are helped, the planet conserved and for some profit generated. In the photo above, the pastor, Alice Ford of Gqunube Green and Francis Bosman have a look at Alice's lunch cooking in the solar cooker at Gqunube Green - all driven by the sun, a free gift of God and tasty to boot.

Tuesday I fly home to Leavenworth. I'm looking forward to seeing my family and church family again. But this trip has been good and it's been valuable to link again with some amazing people and the global vision, incubating locally, of learning how we as Christians might rise to the challenges facing our one planet in the 21st century.

Oh, and it was just as well I wasn't able to watch the rugby to the final whistle. South Africa lost!

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Letter to Leavenworth, Washington #1

Gqunube Green, South Africa

Hi Folks,

The journey to Gqunube Green, South Africa from Seattle, Washington was a long one. Upon arrival I hit the ground running, but not before saying hullo to my buddies (see photo at right). Much preparation needed to be done for the first Gqunube Green Gathering of future residents. Meeting, some for the first time, the residents has been a wonderful experience and I am left with the feeling that these are some amazing people with much to offer this challenging venture of establishing a village that models sustainable lifestyles.

The Sunday of the weekend was a special day because the Tricircle Pavilion was dedicated, a message given by Bishop Eric Pike, and the herd of Nguni cattle blessed as an act of thanksgiving for what they do as a land management tool to care for the ecovillage grasslands. Bishop Pikes' message was inspirational as he encouraged us to continue the work we have started. Then gathering to watch the cattle and participate in prayerfully giving thanks to God for them was an amazing experience. The photo above shows me talking to Bishop Pike and his wife, Joyce. Click on the photo and you will see two friends who are also board members of the Christian Ecovillage Trust.

Well, with the people all gone and the Gathering over I could turn to being your ambassador of Christ. Yesterday I visited CATCH in the Gonubie township and delivered the soccer shirts and cheque given to me by Brianne Vincent for this youth project. The photo shows Sue, holding up two cheques on the far right, with her team celebrating the gifts from friends who live so far away. They were so moved and appreciative of your concern and support and send you their heartfelt thanks Brianne. The second cheque is a gift from a couple who visited CATCH last year when they were here on Serv-fari 2007. Sue was most appreciative guys!

Today I meet with Debbie to give her a cheque of $427 for FLOC, a non-profit supporting terminally ill children and their families at Frere Hospital . These funds were raised by the children of Osborn Elementary who have been studying Africa this past year. They decided to raise some money to help the children of Africa and with just a jar in the library receiving donations, $427 was raised. One generous little girl emptied her "life-savings" from her piggy bank, about $70, and dropped it in. Thank you Osborn kids! Debbie says they have just bought a house which they will be using for the families of those needing to be close to their children while they receive treatment. Your donation will help make it look better.

Well, today the Village Inn has been very quiet as all the workers have been given the day off. Nobody around but me....and the wildlife have come out to play. I saw an Nyala ram (a deer), a whole troop of monkeys who are busy raiding the garden (see the rascal trying to hide from me in the above photo as he chomps on a stolen orange), and a bunch of different kinds of birds I haven't seen in a long time. It's great to know that all these creatures are resident on the ecovillage. Reminds me of the deer back home in Leavenworth. Sometimes tough to raise a garden. (I have visions of Norm Porter chasing deer away from his newly planted flowers at the front of the church).

I'm missing you all in Leavenworth. I know the Harvest Team is taking care of the Jerusalem Cross garden, Judy is holding fort in the office and that all is well in a congregation it is such a privilege to serve. Carla and I will stop by to see Tom Guthrie after I arrive back in Seattle. Please keep him in your prayers and remember to contact him and Mary. Roger

Monday, June 30, 2008

3. The Tricircle Pavilion: An Architectural Meditation on Christian Faith and Practice - Christian Practice

Three overlapping circles!
A church. A garden. And a cattle kraal -
an architectural hint, dug into the one earth we have, of an orthodoxy of practice, a One-Planet-Lifestyle, promoting profitable living while caring for planet and people.

(...being composed. Watch this space!)

2. The Tricircle Pavilion: An Architectural Meditation on Christian Faith and Practise - Christian Faith

Three circles!
A church. A garden. A cattle kraal.
An architectural reminder of the Godhead - Father, Son and Holy Spirit...Creator, Saviour, Sustainer.
An orthodoxy of belief dug into our one planet as foundation of the Christian faith.












The overlapping circles form the symbol of the fish (ichthus), three of them, silently affirming the earliest of Christian creeds..."Jesus Christ, Son of God, Saviour."











To open the door to this sanctuary is to put one's hand upon the rugged cross...so to touch the mystery of that which promises personal, national and global redemption, ....but not without sacrifice.











Entering, one passes beneath the word IXOYE, etched in glass, as affirmation of Emmanuel, that Word which was in the beginning, who fashioned the world and in Christ Jesus became enfleshed.










Entering...
...one finds oneself within the encircling warmth of embodied trinity, inter leading doors for exploration of the many faces of God.








Just as the three outside fish (formed by the overlap of the two outside circles and the door handles into the church from the kraal and garden) invites one on a "journey inward,"...














... so the fish on the "kraal" and "garden" doors within the sanctuary, point to the "journey outward," there to engage the planet and all its' people with the transforming embrace of God's love.












And so, the Tricircle Pavilion: An architectural meditation linking church and garden, church and cattle kraal....heaven and earth.

“I Bind Unto Myself This Day”

I bind unto myself this day
the strong name of the Trinity.

Christ be with me, Christ within me,
Christ behind me, Christ before me,
Christ beside me, Christ to win me,
Christ to comfort me, Christ above me,
Christ in quiet, Christ in danger,
Christ in the hearts of all that love me,
Christ be with me this day.

From Celtic Daily Prayer - Prayers and Readings from the Northhumbria Community

Blessing of the Nguni Herd



"Blessed are you, Lord God, maker of all living creatures. You called forth the fish in the Gqunube River and Indian Ocean, the birds in the air and the animals that roam our forests and mountains. You inspired St. Francis to call all of them his brothers and sisters. We ask you to bless this Nguni herd present here today. By the power of your love, enable each one to live according to your plan. And may we always praise you for all your beauty in creation. Blessed are you, Lord our God, in all your creatures! Amen." - Source: Duke University Chapel, 2004 Service, adapted

(This entry dedicated to Bill and Pat Luebke who work so tirelessly to organize the Blessing of Animals ceremony of Community United Methodist Church in Leavenworth, Washington and to Simanga Booi who is principal stockman at Gqunube Green).

1. The Tricircle Pavilion: An Architectural Meditation on Christian Faith and Practise - The Architecture





Three overlapping circles. One a church. Another a cattle kraal. The third a garden.










An inviting entrance way...









...to a door with rugged cross handle...














...and beyond a worship or meeting space.










From this space, flowering herbs in the circle garden peep through the "garden" door...














...as do the wooden posts of the kraal through the "kraal" door.















The cattle kraal, ... a place for people to gather and mingle...









...and a place for the cattle who come in from the fields once a year that we might give thanks to God for these creatures that provide food and care for the grasslands.









And beyond, a covered walkway to restrooms and the outdoor kitchen with observation deck above...











...passing a heron sculpture on the way.







And so, the Tricircle Pavilion: An architectural meditation linking church and garden, church and cattle kraal....heaven and earth.

“I Bind Unto Myself This Day”

I bind unto myself this day
the strong name of the Trinity.
I humbly praise the aweful (filled with awe) name:
the Three in One, the One in Three,
of whom all nature hath creation -
eternal Father, Spirit, Word.
Praise to the God of my salvation!

I bind this day to me for ever
by power of faith: Christ’s incarnation,
His baptism in the Jordan river,
His death on the cross for my salvation.

His bursting from the spiced tomb,
His riding up the heavenly way,
His coming on the day of doom,
I bind unto myself today.

Christ be with me, Christ within me,
Christ behind me, Christ before me,
Christ beside me, Christ to win me,
Christ to comfort me, Christ above me,
Christ in quiet, Christ in danger,
Christ in the hearts of all that love me,
Christ be with me this day.

From Celtic Daily Prayer - Prayers and Readings from the Northhumbria Community

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Walking the Talk: An Orthodoxy of Practise?

Perhaps its' true to say that in life there is always a correct way of doing things and an incorrect way. If the word orthodox means "the correct way" then orthodox Christian doctrine means "correct" or "right belief." And the Tricircle Pavilion at Gqunube Green, designed in the shape of three circles (see above photo showing future ecovillage residents enjoying a braai in the cattle kraal circle) is an architectural affirmation of orthodox Christian doctrine or "right belief" - that for Christians God is best understood as Father, Son and Holy Spirit or Creator, Saviour and Sustainer.

But in this day with enormous challenges facing the people of the earth and the planet itself, the value of "right belief" must be benchmarked against "right practice." Or, stated differently, the value of "right belief" can only be measured by its' contribution to the well being of an ailing planet and all its' people, and this on an ongoing basis. So, if we know what orthodox Christian doctrine is, perhaps the urgent question for caring Christians concerned for planet and people is: "What might the orthodox Christian practice of an orthodox Christian doctrine look like?

Again the Tricircle Pavilion attempts to embody an architectural reply. If the three circles represents People, Planet and Profit respectively (the 3P's), then the goal of an orthodox Christian practice is represented by that area the three circles have in common, a place of promising synergy where people live "profitably" on the earth while caring for people and planet. In other words no decision will be made to benefit oneself personally (profit) if it adversely impacts the planet or other people. 3P decision-making therefore will result in a lifestyle commitment that will help lead the world towards sustainability.

So with God guiding and the people willing, perhaps Gqunube Green will become that model of sustainability where residents live "profitably" while caring for people and planet, simultaneously growing economic, social and ecological capital. And as a place of teaching and community celebration (see the above photo of Nguni cattle in the circular kraal for a blessing of animal service, thanks being offered to God for their role in maintaining the health of the ecovillage ecosystem) hopefully the Tricircle Pavilion will serve as an architectural reminder of a conceptual framework which, in linking heaven and earth, provides both meaning and direction to the lifestyles we choose.

Thursday, June 26, 2008

2008 Visit - First Impressions

I touched down at Oliver Tambo International Airport for my annual visit to South Africa and immediately it began - trying to get in touch with the pulse, recently quickened by xenophobic violence against immigrants, of the rainbow nation.

I discovered that beneath the kinesthetic charisma of the smile and dance of South Africans lies layers upon layers of uncertainty. About the political process. The ability of its' institutions to withstand assault by those intent only on self-service. About the economy and its' ability to deliver people from the poverty that will inevitably undermine social stability. About the health of our natural resources and their ability to survive wholesale plunder in the name of greed on the one hand and survival on the other.

Now, at 3:00 a.m. in the morning, a body clock still on Pacific time, and with the distant drone of the Indian Ocean surf on the night air, I sit here in the Village Inn and wonder how this ecovillage might offer a glimmer of hope to a beloved country crying anew.

The solution, I'm convinced, lies with ordinary people doing the job, leading by example, showing the way...something a thriving ecovillage might do?

Tomorrow people start arriving for the first Gqunube Green Gathering - owners of 27 erven committed to buying in to this ecovillage dream. How I pray that these capable people, most of them professional and disempowered as individuals on the national stage, are bringing with them the solutions often found within the synergy of the whole! Perhaps the new Tricircle Pavilion can help offer a construct for combining the orthodoxy of faith with an orthodoxy of practise. More on this as the weekend unfolds.

Saturday, June 21, 2008

The Abundant Herd

Inkomo eyezindlu or "beast which has the houses" is a descriptive Zulu term for an Nguni cow with the hide markings like the one in the photograph below. The small, black round circles on a white coat represent the circular huts dotting the Zulu countryside.

Like the Zulu, the Xhosa people have wonderfully descriptive terms for animals in their herds depending on the colour and patterns on a hide and/or shape of horns. These terms often allude to aspects of nature. For example, a black animal with white head is likened to the African Fish Eagle (very similar to the North American Bald Eagle with its' conspicuous white head) and called uNkwazi (Fish Eagle in Zulu).

The naming of the cattle by the Zulu and Xhosa herders doesn't follow any strict scientific protocol. Rather the poetic names emerge because of a daily association between a herder with his cattle and the surrounding countryside, expressing patterns of similarity between an animals hide and what he observes around him.

The abundant herd of Nguni cattle at Gqunube Green could well offer residents endless opportunities to once again reconnect with nature in the daily round of living, the disconnect perhaps being partly to blame for humanity's abuse of creation. By simply learning to associate the patterns on a hide with other aspects of nature on Gqunube Green, perhaps we too will learn to regularly give expression to the beauty which surrounds us and be spurred to find ways of caring for it.

The Gqunube Green Nguni herd arrived about eight years ago. They are the ecovillages' first residents and began to play their role in creation care immediately. Holistic Grazing Management has allowed us to use them as a land management tool so implementing the pattern of sustainable agriculture. They have helped to preserve the grasslands firstly by tramping the moribund grass down and allowing fresh grass that was being shaded out to grow. Secondly, by browsing young acacia and Port Jackson saplings they have slowed bush encroachment, particularly of alien invaders. Their contribution goes well beyond supplying meat as they improve the water and mineral cycles of the ecosystem processes through their dunging and hoof action and enhance the solar energy flow of the property.

Exercising my own poetic imagination, Inkomo eyezindlu or "beast which has the houses," the old matriarch of the Nguni herd, has perhaps been a walking testimony for those of us about to build our homes on the very grasslands she and the herd has been grazing for these past eight years. As our homes move from her hide onto the land, will we, like the resident herd, strive to give to the land and the emerging community as much as we take?

While I prepare to wing my way back home tomorrow to join other future residents of Gqunube Green for a weekend of celebration and planning, I can only hope that we will. The future of the abundant herd depends on it. And this small, resiliently fragile world over which I will be flying needs places like Gqunube Green, "enacted parables of creation care," to help light the path to that "still better way."

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Tricircle Pavilion - Off the Page into Reality

Leavenworth, Washington. Dave Muller, future resident of Gqunube Green and architect of the Tricircle Pavilion, has taken the concept of a tricircle church shared with him in an informal brief, and rendered a superb design which promises to serve Gqunube Green ecovillage well in a multitude of ways other than a church. It will, be a gathering place for the future residents to meet, so playing a role in the social formation of the ecovillage; a classroom for the Gqunube Green Learning Center's courses on aspects of sustainability so necessary for the ecovillage's, and the world's, collective future; a venue for an occasional wedding, one of which has already been planned by future residents for their daughter; and who knows what else this unusual building will witness. Perhaps it is fair to suggest that the Tricircle Pavilion will be at the heart of Gqunube Green's common life. I hope so. The building is meant to serve.

Yet any well designed hall, including the Tricircle Pavilion, could support the important functions listed above. But it is when "Tricircle Pavilion" becomes "Tricircle Church" that my heart quickens with the hope the battle for sustainability, at Gqunube Green and everywhere, might yet be won. The three overlapping circles speak of an understanding of God in which God's Son empties himself as a suffering servant for the good (redemption) of the world. And miracles happen when people respond with Christlike humility to serve in the cause of truth. Witness the lives of the four South African Nobel Peace Prize winners whose statues stand witness at the V&A Waterfront in Cape Town - Chief Albert Luthuli, Presidents Nelson Mandela and F.W. DeKlerk, and Bishop Desmond Tutu. Their sacrificial service helped rescue a nation by leading it in a different direction!

The world of the twenty first century faces a "final battle" of sorts. Victory - over the threat of environmental collapse promising devastating human consequences - can only be won as each global citizen learns to live sacrificially, like God's Son, for the good of the world. For that reason I find it thrilling that the Tricircle Pavilion design, depicting the iconic Christian fish, commends the earliest of creeds, "Jesus Christ, Son of God, Saviour." [Ichthus (ΙΧΘΥΣ, in Greek) means Image:Ichthus.svg fish and is an acronym for this creed]. For in commending the one who lived, and died, for the greater good, the architecture itself points each Gqunube Green resident towards that same Nobel-Peace-Prize-quality seen in Christ Jesus of a life of serving the greater good. In this sense, as church, perhaps the Tricircle Pavilion might yet nurture the same commitment among ecovillage residents, to adopt One-Planet-Lifestyles even if it requires sacrifice.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

A Tricircle Church.


Leavenworth, Washington. From a vision birthed during a communion service amongst rural Xhosa villagers in Soto, Mooiplaas, through two draft designs never implemented, an out-of-the-box church has finally emerged at Gqunube Green ecovillage to help unite heaven and earth. It will be dedicated by retired bishops Eric Pike and Norman Hudson on Sunday, 29 June this year. And what a celebration it promises to be!


In this tricircle church design the trinity of Christian orthodoxy - Father, Son and Holy Spirit - unites with the trinity of sustainability - People, Planet and Profit, (or Economic Capital, Social Capital and Natural Capital) - to ground the heavenly-mindedness of faith with the nitty, gritty challenge of caring for planet and people. In linking the Christian liturgical seasons, advent through kingdomtide, with creations' seasons, autumn through summer, services of worship will rehearse the ancient story of one God, one earth, and the unity of humanity in a fresh and creation-transforming way.

A blessing of the cattle herd after calving season, whose role in ensuring healthy grasslands is practised, reminds us they are partners in farming God's way; a blessing of seeds at springtime as gardeners prepare to plant, hoping for an abundant yield, presents our hopes and aspirations to a loving God; harvest festivals during autumn which give thanks to God for the fruits of the earth reminds us that life ultimately is a gift from beyond ourselves: all these will combine with the worship of God in Christ Jesus to help both shape a Christian spirituality which affirms that the "earth is the Lord's" and empowers the faithful to tackle the challenge of earth care facing us in the 21st century.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

The Journey Continues -This Blogs Beginnings

Leavenworth, Washington. This inaugural entry continues a story that began in the Eastern Cape of South Africa 17 years ago in 1992. It's a personal tale of aspiring with friends and colleagues to a still better way - living life "profitably" while caring about people and planet. Not without struggle and frustration and heartbreak, the story continues to unfold on a magical property called Gqunube Green. Set on the Gqunube River, Gqunube Green ecovillage is a 97 hectare property of forests and grasslands and fertile bottomlands. It sports a breathtakingly beautiful view of the river's tranquil lagoon as it flows across a wide, sandy beach into the blue Indian Ocean beyond. People are settling this acreage of promise and arrive with the vision of "a still better way." The ongoing story promises to be an exciting one, at the very least an interesting one. This blog invites you to journey with me so that together we might learn.....and jointly aspire to the Gqunube Green's of our own futures and continents. Please feel free to comment by posting your own thoughts. - Roger Hudson