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Global Dharma Conference 2003 Shunya was invited to perform at the Global Dharma Conference 2003 in July in Edison, New Jersey. In the international concert, Shunya shared a stage with STEM Dance, Shanti Shanti, and a headlining performance by Ustaad Zakir Hussain, L. Shankar & Gingger, and Shivamani! Shunya brought a touch of theatre to the over 1500 strong
audience by performing "Without A Script" written & directed
by Soham Mehta and featuring Rishi Goswami, Radhika Dinavahi, Ninaad Vaidya,
and Soham Mehta. The main Friday afternoon attraction was quite appropriately a diaspora session where youth leaders from five different continents narrated their personal experience with social service work in different communities. Dharmesh Mistry, president of the National Hindu Students Forum, U.K. informed t he audience about the role of South-Asian youth in raising awareness on Hindu heritage and spiritual lifestyle in Europe and Australia. Saumitra Gokhle, a social activist from Caribbean, presented a pictorial history of the evolution of different co mmunities in Guyana, Surinam and Trinidad. Anand Shah, a Harvard graduate who has been working with tribal communities in India through Indicorps emphasized, "a common belief in the effort to understand ourselves is what brings us together to ; search for the meaning of dharma. As Indians who live abroad it is essential that we understand what India means to us as Individuals, and more importantly what we mean to India."
Friday night bhangra/raas festivities and special performance
by international pop-star Apache Indian continued until 1:30 AM, but conference
participants were awake and ready early the next morning for an intensive
day of workshops, debates, and discussions. Leading experts in a variety
of fields explored the themes of dharma and self, dharma and family, dharma
and society, and dharma and the world as nine different breakout sessions
occurred at one time and covered topics ranging from Brainwaves of a Yogi
to Dharma for Sustainable Development an d Good Governance. Participants
found Saturday's parallel sessions especially fulfilling as they were
able to interact with speakers and attendees in groups that ranged from
as small as ten to as large as three hundred. Among the large num ber
of Following the afternoon sessions, an international concert was held where respected artists Zakir Hussain, L. Shankar and Gingger, and Shivamani played together for the very first time. Their combination of tabla, double violin, and percussion absolutely spell bounded the audience as did a performance by STEM dance theatre that explored dharma through nonverbal communication. In a play titled "Without a Script", the Houston-based Shunya theater group enacted the moral dilemma faced by the young generation in daily life an d actress Goldie Hawn addressed conference participants via live videoconference. The Shanti-Shanti sisters stole the hearts of everyone with their melodious chanting of mantras and particularly inspired Indian America! n youth to learn more about their heritage. The Shanti Shanti Sisters are of American origin and are the only Sanskrit rock band in the world. They kept the audience cheering till 1 am in the morning. The final day of the conference was also me morable as
an interfaith panel discussed the universal appeal of dharma and importance
of international harmony. Some of the panel speakers included Gurudev
Chitrabhanu - spiritual head of the Jain Meditation Center; Swami Dayananda
Saraswati -spiri tual head of the Arsha Vidya Gurukul and head of the
advisory council for the conference; Dr. David Frawley (Pt Vamadeva Shastri),
Director of Institute of Vedic Studies, Anand Amarjit Singh, Honorary-Affiliate
of the Sikh tradition at the United Nations; and Mr. Bawa Jain, Secretary-General
of the World Peace Summit. Following the panel, the President of India,
Dr. A.P.J. The first-ever Global Dharma Conference came to an emotional close as key conference organizers shared their own sentiments and commented on the success of the conference. Conference public relations director Nikunj Trivedi, in his vote of thanks, urged all attendees to act dharmically, quoting from scriptures and speaking in Sanskrit "Those who protect Dharma, Dharma will protect." Kanchan Banerjee, coordinator of HSC and chairman of the Dharma Conference Committee, offered, "that the gathering of youth in the Dharma Conference would create a momentum that would have global impact." He also recognized the incredible amount of effort that youth volunteers from all of the country had investe d in the success of the conference. Rakhi Israni, who was the conference program director and one such volunteer, commented that this was a "life time opportunity to work with and to see that the efforts of the young generation made such a huge impa ct in the minds of young and old alike." Conference transportation and accommodations director, Rishi Bhutada, echoed such emotions: "This conference was totally organized by youth, and the conference organizers felt it was a smashing success. The time and energy put in by the youth volunteers, especially from the Hindu Students Council, coupled with advice from adults, made this conference a tremendous achievement." While the Global Dharma Conference! 2003 came to an end on July 27th, it was obvious from the excitement and motivation of the youth volunteers and organizers that another such event is certainly in the near horizon. For more information, please log on to www.dharmaconference.org
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