Dear Friends,
thank you for all your thoughts and for sharing these important events.
Last September in Istanbul Bert set up a constellation, a blind
constellation with me and a woman wearing a scarf. Nothing was said before
the beginning of the constellation about the issue. The constellation was
interrupted when the lady with the scarf kneeled on the floor trying to
relieve the pain of a dead person on the floor.
After the constellation was over Bert revealed that the issue was the
genocide of the Armenian population by the Ottoman Turks, genocide still
fiercely denied by the Turkish government.
With that gesture of kneeling a spark of light was reaching through the
darkness of the horrors of a million and a half souls and all their
successors and addressing a mouvement toward peace.
I am grateful to Bert and Constellation Work for bringing about this
mouvement.
Namaste
Chiara Hayganush
On 3/29/08, Alison Rose Levy <LevyAR@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
westward
Dear Max, Margreet and everyone:
As the torch of hope carried by the currents of reconciliation passes
from Australia to Europe, here on American soil, here¹s a prayer forAmericans
to remain open, steadfast, and strong to receive, carry, and pass itforward
too.this
All of us who are so fortunate to offer this work and participate in
virtual collective encircling the world share a practice and anexperience
that sustains us in open-heartedness, fuels hope, and aligns us withsomething
greater..(if I
Many thanks to you and all.
love,
Alison
I saw this speech on television too, and it was even greater: she said
remember correctly) : I bow (Ich verneige mich.) before the victims, Ibow
before the families that have lost their loved ones, I bow before thepeople
that have suffered.....struggles
At that time I felt that despite all our own little arguments and
as facilitators there is something really important happening in theworld.
We can make a difference, this work of Bert Hellinger and colleagueshave
made a difference and maybe contributed to making this possible - if itfate
resonates on a level like this. Who knows what effect all these bows to
in all these constellations have in the end and all these constellationsas
where the perpetrators started to see their victims for the first time
human beings. I remember in the 'old days' (about seven years ago) if athe
perpetrator stayed hard with a closed heart, sometimes Bert would set up
parents of the victim. They grieved over the death of their belovedchild.
Sometimes seeing this grieve made the heart of the perpetrator also opena
little bit more.visit to
And what do you think about the French prime minister saying on his
Londen that France wants to become like brothers to England again?? (Anythese
idea how many have lost their lives in the century long wars between
two countries in the past?)make a
If we can keep our soul free and our minds and emotions steady we can
difference, and so do our clients. At the right time in the right place,and
we feel we are all in service of something greater....
Love
Margreet Mossel
www.opstellingen.com <http://www.opstellingen.com/>
_____
Van: ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx<ConstellationTalk%40yahoogroups.com>
<mailto:ConstellationTalk%40yahoogroups.com>
[mailto:ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx<ConstellationTalk%40yahoogroups.com>
<mailto:ConstellationTalk%40yahoogroups.com> ] Namens Max Dauskardt
Verzonden: zaterdag 29 maart 2008 8:50
Aan: ConstellationTalk
Onderwerp: [ConstellationTalk] "The Shoah fills us Germans with shame"
In Mid February it was "my" Australian Prime Minister
addressing Parliament to say 'Sorry'
to all Indigenous Australians.
A few weeks later "my" German Chancellor
addressed the Israeli Parliament to say:
"The Shoah fills us Germans with shame,"
Two unrelated events?
A ray of hope?
A sign of times changing?
Witnessing the right words spoken at the right moment,
feeling their effect ("do you feel better now or worse ?")
it is near impossible not to think:
constellation principles are at work at large.
I for one could not stop a sigh of relief escaping
upon reading what took place in the Knesset.
Growing up in the fifties to an increasing awareness
of the horror that had happened before I was born,
at times I had the sense
of being the only one to feel shame.
Then no one wanted to talk
about that part of the German past.
It did not even have a name then.
For Angela Merkel to be invited
to be the first German Chancellor ever
to speak in the Knesset, in German,
opened the chance which she took impeccably
to speak the words:
"The Shoah fills us Germans with shame"
Thank you for making this possible.
Max
Harmony In Human Systems,
Melbourne, Australia
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