SANTA BARBARA PERMACULTURE NETWORK
Presents:
An Evening with Common Vision:
Dinner, Drumming, Story Telling and Video Show
Celebrating the Transformation of Concrete Jungles into Urban Fruit Tree
Forest by Tree Planting at Schools in California
Wednesday , March 14, 6:30-9:30 pm, fundraiser/donation $10
Goleta Valley Community Center
An evening celebration to welcome Common Vision
once again to our community will take place at the Goleta Valley
Community Center, on Wed, March 14, at 6:30 pm. The evening
will include a potluck dinner, drumming & storytelling, and video
show, with all donations going to the group to help raise funds for the
trees and the 2007 Fruit Tree Tour. Common Vision will be visiting
two schools in Santa Barbara this year, Ceasar Chavez, and the Open
Alternative School.
It is the Fourth Annual California Common Vision FRUIT
TREE TOUR, taking place from February 20-April 25 2007,
celebrating the transformation of concrete jungles into urban orchards (
www.commonvision.org). Thirty volunteer
earth educators from northern California, travel to schools from Los
Angeles to San Francisco in the largest known vegetable oil-powered
caravan: six vehicles, including three busses. The all volunteer crew
travels as a nomadic community visiting schools to plant 1000 fruit trees
with urban youth. The three month tour is divided into day-long
programs at each school featuring cultural story-telling, West African
agricultural drumming, earth-conscious hip-hop, and hands-on involvement
in the stewardship of the students school yard.
Common Vision infuses public schools and spaces with
inspiration, infrastructure, and experience to support solution-focused
environmental education for urban youth. Common Vision facilitates
hands-on projects with students and community leaders that serve to
retrofit public schools and spaces into models of sustainability.
Students of all ages are awed and inspired by
three vegetable oil-powered school busses, hand-painted in
landscape murals depicting indigenous communities, rolling into the
school yard and breaking the monotony of their regular school routine.
Symbolic storytelling, strong West African Dun-Dun-Bah agricultural
rhythms, and the planting of fruit trees explodes into a celebration of
life and interconnectedness focusing on respect for the earth.
In the spirit of native oral tradition, FRUIT TREE TOUR
storytellers bring to life tales from the past of living in harmony with
the earth and the process of how society forgot our connection with the
earth. Dancers draped in African mud-cloth fabric and drummers ornately
dressed set the stage for the storytelling to unfold. A bold cast of
characters and musicians brightly portray these events with minimal words
from a narrator and an elaborate display of culture and color.
In a tree planting celebrations students will drum
earth rhythms, while working in intimate groups with FRUIT TREE TOUR
facilitators to dig holes, prepare the roots, and plant the trees.
Facilitators will engage students in dialogues around key ecological and
cultural concepts such as nutrient cycles, interconnectedness, diversity,
and respect. Students, teachers, principals, and FRUIT TREE TOUR
volunteers gather for a closing circle. The circle takes a moment to give
thanks for the day's experience.
FRUIT TREE TOUR cultivates the students appreciation
for the earth that can serve as a foundation for environmental
responsibility, a key element of the next generation. The participation
in creating and maintaining a school yard orchard provides a space to
engage a stewardship ethic as something personal and local, not a distant
abstraction. Students are able to provide their school and extended
community with beauty, health, and abundance.
Last year Common Vision came to Goleta Family School,
and the year before, Monte Vista School, planting Fruit Trees, while
interacting with music and storytelling for the student body.
Founded in 1999, Common Vision is a solution-focused
nonprofit organization, a project of International Humanities Center.
Common Vision's mission is to cultivate ecological awareness and respect
for the Earth while generating social and environmental changes towards
sustainable lifestyles. We integrate concepts of ecology with the
traditions, music, and art of cultures that live or have lived in harmony
with the Earth.
The evening celebration to welcome Common Vision will
take place at the Goleta Valley Community Center, 5679 Hollister Ave,
on Wednesday, March 14 6:30-9:30, with a pot-luck dinner followed by
story telling, drumming and slide show. Donation of $10 for adults,
children free (no reservations needed) to help raise funds for
the 2007 FRUIT TREE TOUR . The Santa Barbara Permaculture Network hosts
the program. For more information, (805) 962-5571,
margie@sbpermaculture.org , visit www.
commonvision .org, or
www.sbpermaculture.org.