Imagine 10,000 Feet of Hope

Dr. King reminded us that we are all "caught in an inescapable web of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly affects all indirectly." All of us are wounded by the war in Iraq, and we must work together to end it.

Whether or not you can come to Washington in March you can be part of the web of resistance by offering a strand of hope.

Here's how: send or bring to Washington a six-foot length of light rope (multi-colored easy-tie clothesline is ideal). Attach to the rope ribbons or bands of cloth with your own hopes for a peaceful Iraq, your own prayers for peace, your own definitions of peace. Imagine something like Buddhist prayer flags.

Leave a foot at each end of your length of rope (so they can be tied together) and fill the remaining four feet. Please keep the ribbons or bands of cloth or prayer flags to two feet or shorter (so they can be carried without dragging the ground), and make them whatever width you like (keeping in mind that onlookers will want to be able read your hopes and prayers).

Let our common longing for peace bind us together in hope. Imagine 10,000 feet of hope.
Send your piece (to arrive by March 4) to:


10,000 Feet of Hope
c/o Clarendon Presbyterian Church
1305 N. Jackson St.
Arlington, VA 22201

Comments

It definitely has affected

It definitely has affected everyone. We humans have advanced so much and with so much scientific developments, we are still ignorant of the fact that we all are connected to each other. We're not isolated beings and we cannot be kept separated from the reality. When any country wants to destroy another country, that effectively disturbs the whole region and that unrest also disturbs the country which wants to do war. It's a cycle and there have been many many wars in the past, yet we haven't realized that no one has gained anything from these wars, instead there have been killings of innocent people. Red Rock home values

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