Seed - Baha'i Writings set to music by Richard Leigh

Seed_cover
I can't recall exactly when I met multi-talented composer/musician Richard Leigh for the first time. I do remember that it was at the annual Baha'i Academy for the Arts, but the year eludes me.

I've loved his compositions ever since I first heard them. I find it difficult to describe Richard's music. Perhaps it's easier to say what it is not than what it is is: it is not 'happy clappy'; it is not formal classical music; it is not pop.

Many of the tracks on Richard's new CD, Seed, echo folk riffs, while some have a more classical feel, but without using classical formalities. 'My Healing' and 'The Remover of Difficulties' both magically weave Iranian chanting into the predominantly Western mode of the music. Overall, a reflective spirituality radiates from these settings of Baha'i sacred texts.

This is serious music, but not self-important. It acts as a setting for the jewel-like texts, enhancing our appreciation for the Word of God without drawing attention to itself.

Richard Leigh at Wellington from Peter Maguire on Vimeo.

If you like to meditate on inspiring words, this CD is for you.

CNN.com tour of Baha'i gardens in Haifa - interview with Rob Weinberg

I was very glad to see my good friend and former colleague on the UK national Baha'i governing council, Rob Weinberg, giving a good interview on CNN.com as part of this video tour of the Baha'i gardens.

Rob is Director of the Office of Public Information at the Baha'i World Centre.

In the interview he explains the purpose of these beautiful gardens and contrasts their beauty and the beauty of the Baha'i teachings with the horrible suffering of the unjustly imprisoned Baha'i leaders in Iran.

Is the new generation less materialistic?

This op-ed by Maurice Levy, chairman and chief executive officer of Publicis Groupe, in the New York Times takes an optimistic view of the rising generation of youth. They are, he says, post-materialistic and may bring a new post-consumerist global ethic into being. He starts by shooting at the gross materialism of the post-baby-boomer generation, which, he claims, led to the Enron and sub-prime mortgage disasters:

I believe that over the past 20 years (at least) the world has lost its bearings and has begun to wager with its moral values. Almost unnoticed, ethics have given way to cynical opportunism in business, in finance, in politics and in life in general.

How else can one explain the lies that were told to drag great nations into an unnecessary war in Iraq? Or the wholesale falsification of national accounts, as if states were hole-in-the-wall businesses scamming the tax man?

...

For all these betrayals of ethics, the bill is very high. It is being paid, in the first place, in millions of jobs destroyed, wealth vaporized and businesses weakened.

It is being paid also, and above all, in a crisis of confidence. A crisis that no financial rescue plan can make go away. People, consumers, employees, shareholders — who now has any confidence? In what? In whom?

Fortunately, I do believe a change is at hand. Consider our children and grandchildren who turn 20 this year. What value system is shaping their imagination and the world they want to create?

...

This new generation, activist and more inherently collective, is now taking the place of the post-Boomers, whose individualism and materialism may perhaps have contributed to the excesses for which we are now paying.

It is infinitely more connected, informed, alert and concerned than its predecessors. These young people are revolutionaries in their own way: They don’t march, but they are rethinking the world, challenging the very principles under which our society has lived since the Industrial Revolution.

They have a new post-materialist attitude to our economic and social system, to business and to consumption, that will shake our behavior and a good number of our certainties.

Today, it is our children who are shaping our ethics, not the other way around. With the firepower that comes from the click of a finger on a keyboard, or the mastery of SMS and social networks, they are changing society.

I think Maurice Levy has highlighted an important generational change, but he has not put this change in the much bigger context of the collapse of the old world order and the growth of a new order, founded firmly in the reality of human oneness and solidarity. This and the conscious development of virtues, such as honesty and trustworthiness, is what will prevent repeats of the kind of greed that led to financial meltdown and the current economic crisis.

The following comment is adapted from an unpublished paper by Baha'i scholar Matt Weinberg (Elements of A Conceptual Framework for Influencing Public Policy, 2006):

We should understand that incentives and penalties, new regulations, new rights and obligations, or creating new public authorities are not the only way of bringing about desired transformations in public behaviour. Collaborative generation of knowledge, education and persuasion are also highly effective in helping people to choose a path of social virtue and service to the common good '...when working to bring about constructive social transformation, the essential moral and spiritual forces animating human identity cannot be ignored.'

"Stay hungry, stay foolish" - Steve Jobs's wisdom

There are some real nuggets of wisdom in this Commencement speech by Steve Jobs at Stanford University.

His comments about his encounter with death are particularly illuminating.

This is well worth watching, but you can give the introduction by the President of Stanford a miss (it takes up about seven minutes at the beginning of the video.

"Stay hungry, stay foolish"? Steve was quoting the back page of the last print edition of the Whole Earth Catalogue.