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By:
Paul
Chaffee, Chair 2008 Host Committee; Director Presidio Interfaith Chapel,
San Francisco
A
glistening San Francisco cast off its summer fog for the first three days
of NAINConnect 2008 – Embracing Our Interfaith Future, held July 24-28.
When the fog returned on Sunday, old friends and new and a cacophony of
happy conversation kept us from noticing. Fromm Hall, a lifelong learning
center at the University of San Francisco, proved an extraordinary work
space. For assemblies and an initial banquet, a lovely tent replaced the
intended hall that was suffering emergency construction issues.
This
20th anniversary Connect drew about 150 registrants One-day passes, along
with presenters who could only attend their own workshops, raised the
number of participants to about 250. Eighty presenters informed three
dozen workshops, four assemblies, and early morning/late evening
meditation sessions. (Workshop descriptions, many with blogs attached, are
still accessible at www.nain.org/2008.)
Conference
highlights included the Kabala Shabbat Friday evening and the Sunday
morning tour of the Interfaith Chapel in the Presidio and Muir Woods’
stunning redwoods. This year’s service project taught us how to create,
use, and distribute solar ovens, a lifesaver in Darfur and a source of
goodies during Connect breaks. The optional Saturday supper cruise started
with panic when six scheduled taxis failed to show. But everyone finally
made it aboard for a lovely evening.
Corbin Davis
, Pacific School of Religion seminarian and former
Interfaith Center at the Presidio intern, was conference director. He
quickly facilitated miracles whenever trouble raised its head. Corbin,
Fred Fielding
, Connect communications director, and NAIN board members
Steve Naylor
and Tracy Wells, helped focus the young adult excitement. Nine young adult
scholarships had been awarded, a dozen more paid their own way, and the
18-35 crowd made a palpable difference. Young adults organized workshops,
were presenters, and put together the late-night digital showcase
sessions, significantly magnifying the conference’s offerings.
Rachael Watcher
, Angela Carlson, and
David Ponedel
, probably the only NAIN banquet chef who has also served on its board,
did the heavy lifting in terms of hospitality and logistics.
Jan Chaffee
handled the books. Their detailed plans and follow-through made for happy
registrants. More than a dozen other host committee members, here and
across the continent, gave time, energy, and imagination to making this a
satisfying experience. They all deserve our appreciation! Thank you!
Along
with the workshops…
An
American Indian opened the NAINConnect 2008 outdoors, and an
African-American gospel duo started us indoors. A Buddhist folk singer
punctuated our talk on Friday. NAIN’s Birthday Banquet sparkled with a
jazz quartet, and Brahma Kumaris graced us musically at the concluding
banquet at St. Mary’s Cathedral, co-sponsored with San Francisco
Interfaith Council.
Don Frew
and
Tomiko Nojima
led the meditation room creation. Mark Denni’s classical guitar gentled
the noisy breaks, and at the final celebration, Host Committee member
Jack Lundin
led us through a number of songs, concluding the Connect with “It’s a
Wonderful World.”
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