BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME:www.indybay.org
PRODID:-//indybay/ical// v1.0//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:Indybay-76683
SEQUENCE:76683
CREATED:20051003T235100Z
DESCRIPTION:Saturday, Oct. 8 @ 7 pm   a benefit for the San Quentin Families Project    
 Larkspur  Theater   549 Magnolia Ave, Larkspur 415.924.5111, 
 http://www.larktheater.net  doors open at 7 pm. Keynote at 7:30  Please 
 join us on October 8th for a heartfelt benefit for the San Quentin Families 
 Project.  Van Jones,  reknowned Human Rights leader for prison reform will 
 be giving a keynote address about the over-incarceration in California’s 
 billion dollar prison industry, and the over-incarceration of marginalized 
 peoples (Van is an undeniable human treasure of the Bay Area, for info on 
 himsee end of announcement). Suzi Jestadt and Liza Klein  will highlight 
 the project during the evening. And others tied to San Quentin, either 
 directly or indirectly, will touch on their experiences. We wholeheartedly 
 invite you to come join us for a touching and worthwhile evening to benefit 
 the San Quentin Families Project.  Food & Drink and Organic ice cream will 
 be served fresh.  T-shirts of the projects' insingia will be available.   
 The autobiography (including poetry) by inmate Watani Stiner will be for 
 sale (Watani's Six children were granted political asylum and arrived in 
 California from Surinam last January).    Live music from Baflao (French 
 West African Band from Oakland), music possibly written for the occasion by 
 Shree Dove (Raw Soul singer/songwriter from Marin, 
 http://www.shreedove.com), and gospel by Joanne Lawson (Vocalist from Los 
 Angeles) will also be served.  :-)  Hosted by Suzi Jestadt  Tickets: 
 $15-$25  Tickets being sold at:  Bedrock Music 415.258.9745, 2226 4th St. 
 San Rafael   e-mail:bedrockmusic@sbcglobal.net  and at the First United 
 Methodist Church 415.453.8716, 9 Ross Valley Rd. San Rafael  e-mail: 
 lhklein@earthlink.net   and will be available at the door of the Lark on 
 the evening of the event.  No one turned away for lack of funds.  For 
 questions and/or more detailed information call Suzi @ 415.485.0676   or 
 Liza @ 415.453.8716  The San Quentin Families Project was outlined by Suzi 
 Jestadt after her experience helping to facilitate a “positive 
 attitude” circle with life inmates at San Quentin State Prison. The 
 desire exhibited by the men in this group to develop a positive attitude 
 and employ its constructive use in their personal prison lives, was 
 enveloped with the grace and beauty to leave a deep transformative imprint 
 on one's heart and mind.  The project hopes to lift these true positive 
 desires above the prison's walls and share them with people on the 
 “outside”. With their wishes to be in community with San Quentin, and 
 for a project to somehow help prisoners, Liza Klein, pastor of the First 
 United Methodist Church of San Rafael, and Suzi created the start of the 
 San Quentin Families Project.  Members of the First United Methodist Church 
 used these ideas to illustrate and finalize the project.  This project is 
 dedicated to helping maintain relationships between inmates of San Quentin 
 and their families. The project  works to start and sustain relationships 
 between men of the prison community and their children while they are 
 incarcerated. It hopes to develop, cultivate, and sustain relationships 
 thereby keeping families in touch, connected, and active We are hoping to 
 enable visits by providing families with the essential funds    to attain a 
 place to stay and to make the trip, making a physical visit not only 
 possible but economically feasible. The project wants to provide  materials 
 for contact, such as stationary, phone cards, and writing utensils. By 
 easing the burden on the families the SQFP dreams for the incarcerated 
 fathers to be active parents in their children lives.        Van Jones is 
 the founding director of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights 
 (http://www.ellabakercenter.org).    The Ella Baker Center seeks to replace 
 the U.S Incarceration industry with youth opportunities and community-based 
 solutions.  In 2002, the center's “Books not Bars” campaign helped stop 
 the construction of a costly and controversial “Super-Jail” for 
 Oakland's youth.  Presently, the center is working to close all of 
 California's scandal-plagued youth prisons and replace them with regional 
 rehabilitation centers. Van, a  spiritual activist, is a passionate 
 advocate for the environment and for responsible business.  By investing in 
 “Green Jobs, Not Jails,” we can ensure that the “Green Wave” lifts 
 up everybody. He serves on numerous governing boards including Bioneers, 
 the New Apollo Project and the Rainforest Action Network.  Van graduated 
 from the University of Tennesee at Martin in 1990 and from the Yale Law 
 School in 1993.  A more detailed article about Watani Stiner  
 http://www.metroactive.com/papers/sonoma/04.20.05/stiner-0516.html  A 
 Phoenix from the Ashes by Van Jones  
 http://www.yesmagazine.org/article.asp?ID=1164  if you read all the words 
 down to here, give yourself some well-deserved love.  you read a lot of 
 important things, thanks.  : - )    \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2005/10/03/76683.php
SUMMARY:San Quentin Families Project benefit
LOCATION:The Lark Theater , 549 Magnolia Ave.\nwww.larktheater.net (see website for 
 directions)\nPhone # 415.924.5111
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2005/10/03/76683.php
DTSTART:20051009T020000Z
DTEND:20051009T050000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
