The Charlotte Jewish News -September 2004 - Page 16 Newcomers are Welcomed to Charlotte AUTO. LIFE. ME 33 TALK TO A REAL, UVE PERSON who’s IN THE SAME PHONE BOOK AS YOU. /lllstate. Howard Epstein 704-846-9700 10618-A Providence Rd You're in good hands. Allstate Pntpeny and Casually Insurance Company. Allstate Indemnity Company and Allstate Life Insurance Company, Home Office; Northbrook, Illinois. O 2004 Allstate Insurance Company The JCC and the Jewish Federation have co-hosted a series of events for new comers. More than 100 new families have joined the JCC and the newcom ers’ “schmooze” gives people an opportunity to get to know each other and current residents and mem bers, many of whom have been “newcomers” at one time as well. This summer the “Schmooze by the Pool” was a big success. Upcoming Newcomers Schmooze events are: Tina Iglesias and children Tyler and Louis: Tina Rogovin and children Sophia and Hayley. Wednesday, September 22, 9:15 AM, JCC, Jaffa Lounge. Sunday, October 3, 10:30 AM, Camp Mindy, Special Program: Dr. Jane Marcus will lead a discussion on, “Making a Successful Transition for You and Your Family.” Wednesday, October 6, 9:15 AM, JCC, Jaffa Lounge. Wednesday, October 20,9:15 AM, JCC Jaffa Lounge. For more information call Mamie Moskowitz at 704-944- 6764 or Marcia Lampert at 704- 944-6731. O Compassionate Listening (Continued from page 15} Octoberr 10-18 event. The project has been successfully offered in 2002 and 2003 in Germany. “Why? This story is more than 50 years old. Because if that story finds light,” energy worker Lynda Boozer, of Charlotte, one of the seven-member support team sug- ■PEDIC PRESSURE RELIEVING SWEDISH MATTRESS AND PILLOW It molds to your body’s curves, allowing your spine to rest In its natural state. Which, in turn, eliminates the threat of back or neck pain. COMING SOON TO PARK TOWNE VILLAGE Tempur-Pedic Adjustable Bed & Pillows TOWER PLACE PINEVILLE • HWY 51 (1/2 Mile North of M85) 704-542-5050 COTSWOLD VILLAGE SHOPS RANDOLPH & SHARON AMITY 704-366-5110 RELAX THE BACK The smartest way to sit or sleep. UNLEASH A JAGUAR SALES EVENT FOR A LIMITED TIME 2004 JAGUAR X-TYPE 3.0 Experience the luxury of the exceptionally equipped X-TYPE 3.0 with automatic transmission, one-touch power moon- roof and permanent all-wheel drive. Indulge in features such as bronze sapele wood trim and split-fold rear seats. Right now is the time to get behind the wheel of the X-TYPE 3.0 with our exceptional lease and finance offers. $2,999 due at signing for lease offer. Security deposit waived. Excludes taxes, title and license fees. BRAND NEW 2004 X-TYPE 2.5 SOI *21,995 • 5-Speed Manual Transmission • Rich Wood Trim • Leather Interior ♦ Permanent Ali-Whee! Drive 2005 jACUAR S-TYPE 3.0 Automatic with moon- $ /| O O rooL$3,999 due at 2004 JAGUAR XJ8 Self-leveling air suspension. $3,699 due ar signing including $4,000 dealer cash.*** Security deposit waived. Excludes taxes, title and license fees. ^699/mo. 36-MONTH LEASE* lAGUAR nr FOR UP TO 60 MONTHS** 400 Tyvola Road • 1-866-200-3031 vvww.scottjag.com SCOTT JAGUAR *Not all leases will qualify for towest lease payment. Some payments higher, some lower. Residency restrictions apply. I Take new retail delivery from dealer stock by 9-30-04.**2004 Jaguar X-TYPE 3,0 MSRP $34,395. Exdudes taxe^ title I and license fees. 60-month jaguar APR financing at $17.48 per month per $1,000 financed with 10 down. Must take I new retail delivefy from dealer stock by 9-30-04. Not all buyers will qualify. ***2004 Jaguar X|8 MSRP $60,495. j Lease payments subject to $4,000 dealer cash and will vaiy based on actual dealer discount. For complete details call 1-800-4-jAGUAR or visit laguarusa.com 02004 jaguar Cars. 2005 JAGUAR XK8 CONVERTIBLE 6-speed ZF automatic o r$ transmission. $3,999 due at "^oW/MO signing. Security deposit waived. Excludes taxes, 24-MONTH title and license fees. LEASE* gests, “then change is possible on the planet. This story holds the archetypal darkest truth.” The Compassionate Listening Project i)egan in 1990 and has done the bulk of its healing and peace-building work in the Middle East. Israelis and Palestinians have participated in many reconciliation projects. Some of these are documented in the video, “The Children of Abraham.” This is not easy work. The sup port team for the 30 or so partici pants includes several therapists, a psychiatrist and others trained in the art of Compassionate Listening. Yet explaining the process to others is a challenge, because the process itself is not “word” dependent. “There is a place for dialogue, but dialogue is a place of the head,” facilitator Cohen explains. “We try and move back into the heart.” “Dialogue is intellectual dis cussion. Compassionate Listening is about moving the energy from the head to the heart,” she contin ued. It is also not something to be confused with therapeutic “active listening” a technique that includes verbally mirroring back your partner’s comments before moving ahead in discussion. Compassionate Listening is about intention; it is about the willingness to being open to hear; Compassionate Listening is about building trust, Boozer offered. “It’s really an art form. There arc techniques, but they deepen your capacity to be an artist. ... We use expressive art, much more than journaling. And we use a lot of rit ual. We want to get it out of the words.” The energy work offered by Boozer is a tool, along with mas sage and other relaxation body work, helping people transcend their “body fear.” When she worked with a group last year in Israel, an Israeli woman told her in distress that she felt her head and her heart were ready to con nect and move forward with her Palestinian listening partner, but her body seized up in terror at the (initial) physical proximity. Boozer was able to help her phys ically relax and release the muscle memories of fear. Another of Boozer’s experi ences was witnessing a German in last year’s group struggle with the recent knowledge that his father had been charged with Nazi war crimes. The intense and wide- ranging feelings plaguing this man were profoundly altered by his participation in the project. The German participants are often witnesses of the atrocities, or chil dren of soldiers. “Watching the depth of the German struggle, their angvSt, the stripping of their goodness - they’ve worn that their whole lives,” Boozer said. “To own it [their personal and national histo ry] yet to dismantle the shame and the guilt, is part of the process. To find the essential goodness of the Germans and the essential trust of the Jews - this is part of the work. “Being with Germans and Jews in Bergcn-Belson can’t be any thing less than potent,” she contin ued. “I got involved in this work as a German, because I want my coun try back,” Mark Dronsfield, a facilitator of the upcoming American project as well as past projects in Germany, said. “I have realized that in order to get my country back fully 1 need the Jewish people back in my country. So the goal is to make it safe enough and welcoming enough for a million Jewish people to happily live in Germany. This project is a big step towards that, it gave me back my faith in humanity.” “The World War II story lives in Israel. Jews want this piece of their story understood by Palestinians,” Boozer continued. To this end a Palestinian/Isracli group went together to Auschwitz, “with no agenda. Just to be pres ent to the story of another.” “Compassionate Listening can bring large change,” Director Leah Green says. “If it starts with just one person and it grows, that is how peace begins. It is eyeball to eyeball. “With Compassionate Listening we don’t come with answers, we don’t come with solutions, we come to build connections. This is so counter to our culture of doing, of having a goal. And this culture is good, but it must be set aside during this bridge building. Then ask, ‘what does my heart long to do in action?”’ The nature of Compassionate Listening work fills Boozer with “delight, wonder and awe. And these things just make popcorn out of your heart.” For more information about the October Baltimore/Washington project please call Andrea Cohen at 206-523-6018 or Brian Berman at 360-297-3358. O