yoga | music | nature| food| community Sunday Revival your once a month Sadhana recharge:
groovy yoga class with live music, satsang, meditation, yoga nidra, and a vegetarian meal after each class.
When: Every Third Sunday, 2:30-4:30pm -rain or shine-
Where: Birch State Park, Glen E Bates Garden Center
3109 E. Sunrise Blvd. Ft. Lauderdale Beach
$20 cash at the door + $2 per person at the Park Gate. (say "garden center Yoga" to get special $2 rate)
This is a carry in/carry out event. Please bring your own bowl & utensils, Yoga mat, towel, and water. Park closes at 5pm.
918 NE 20th Avenue, 2nd floor, waterside. Fort Lauderdale 954.828.1651
www.redpearlyoga.com
breathe... stretch...
become...
globalbriefs News and resources to inspire concerned citizens to work together in building a healthier, stronger society that benefits all.
Got Faith? Global Religion Remains Strong Despite Repression
In a recent, nondenomi- national global survey of 18,000 people across 24 countries by UK research firm Ipsos Mori, 70 percent identified themselves with a chosen religion. Thirty percent said that their religion motivates them to give time or money to people in need and 73 percent of those under age 35 said their religion or faith was important in their life. At the same time, Rising Restric-
tions on Religion, a recent report by the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Re- ligion & Public Life, found that more than 2.2 billion of the world’s total population of 6.9 billion people live in countries where either government re- strictions on religion or social hostilities
Bully Beaters Cooperation is Key to Social Harmony
Bullies seem to be made, not born. A study from the University of California, Berkeley, concludes that a cooperative school experience, versus a competitive one, can play a major positive role in the socialization of students. Researchers canvassed 217
students in grades three through five, measuring how much they liked to cooperate or compete with their peers, and how often they acted with ag- gression or kindness toward them. The youngsters also estimated how often their teachers put them in small groups to complete assignments together, a classroom strategy known as “coopera- tive learning,” because the students have to collaborate with one another to get their work done.
Students that engaged in more
frequent cooperative learning were more likely to say they enjoyed cooperating with others and reported exhibiting kind,
20 Broward County, Florida
FtL.NaturalAwakeningsMag.com
involving religion rose substantially between 2006 and 2009. Most of the countries that experi- enced substantial increases already had high levels of restrictions or hostilities. “This survey shows how
much religion matters and that no analysis of the contemporary
world, political or social, is complete without understanding the relationship between faith and globalization,” says former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair, a patron of the Tony Blair Faith Founda- tion. “There is much to encourage the view that people can learn to respect those of another faith and live with them peacefully. Interfaith dialogue and action today is not just an interesting but pe- ripheral minor subject; it is the essence, central to creating greater social cohe- sion and harmony.”
Sources: Christian Today (UK); PewFo-
rum.org
helpful, pro-social behaviors. In contrast, students that said they preferred to com- pete were significantly more likely to act aggressively toward their peers and try to do them harm. The results suggest that coopera- tion begets cooperation. The research- ers further concluded that cooperative experiences promote the development of the personality trait of cooperation. Based on their results, the researchers advocate more cooperative learning in classrooms as a way to promote posi- tive behaviors and combat bullying, or harm-intentioned aggression.
Source: Greater Good Science Center
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