Back in
February I received an invitation to an event called “MountainTop: Advancing a multifaith movement for justice” convening
in Nashville, Tennessee, over three days in June. The invitation said this was a “summit of established and
emerging leaders inspired by their faith, heritage or core values. … [to] work
together to establish the multifaith movement as a platform that informs,
invigorates and inspires other inclusive social change initiatives and promotes
collaboration.” I accepted.
After a
long, miserable and tiring day of travel, I arrived bleary-eyed but with an
open mind and no agenda.
We met in a
remarkable facility called the Vanderbilt
Center for Better Health. The
site featured many flat and curved whiteboards on rollers, bookcases, tables,
and other furniture, all reconfigured from session to session as needed.
As each of
us arrived, we were warmly greeted and photographed, then invited to breakfast
at round tables. There were large
papers on the tables with squares for us to write things like our names. In one square we drew ourselves using
only five lines, and in another we wrote something unlikely that informed our
spirituality, while one square remained intentionally blank. I wrote “Samurai Jack” as a
personal source. Staff gathered these papers and soon they all appeared posted
on various boards around the room with the photo taken when we entered. (I must say I didn’t weather the bad
travel day well.)
Soon Fred Johnson, an ordained
nondenominational minister with the World Fellowship International Church,
summoned us to a central gathering place with drumming and song.
We sat
facing a large curved whiteboard, probably about 30 feet long, with two large
video monitors on either side. As
chief facilitator Rob Evans of Imaginal
Labs explained what we were about to embark upon, artists using bright
markers wrote words and phrases and drew images and other graphics reflecting
Rob’s words and participants’ questions and answers, until they filled the
entire board. All the while
everything was being filmed and everyone could see the writings on the board
close up as the cameras zoomed in on sections and they appeared on the two
video monitors.
Among the
writings noted were: the positives
and negatives of models; must be aware of pitfalls of modeling, but models are
necessary, serve a purpose, re-imagine how things can be different; Groundswell digital training
for social change; importance of local congregation involvement in movements
for social change; change starts from within; taking a stand allows
perspective, and is different from taking a position; stand allows other
positions to be heard; movement comes from taproot alignment; taking a stand
includes perpetrator as well as victim; need to heal both.
Using the
interactive and iterative Design
Shop process, our time together consisted of three phases: Scan,
Focus and Act. Milestones for each phase are:
At the end
of Scan Phase:
- Build knowledge and trust in the room with each other
- Learn about the aspirations and vision of each participant - - as an individual leader and their respective organizations
- Better understand the conditions and landscape - - current state/future state - - of the multifaith religious movement for social justice
- Better articulate the key opportunities and barriers that need to be embraced and navigated
- Begin to have developed some hypothesis for a way forward
- Be intellectually, emotionally, spiritually and politically keen to continue the journey
At the end
of the Focus Phase:
- Explore potential options of intersectional collaboration through design thinking and model building
- Establish key criteria and filters that govern decision framework for commitment, collaboration and action
- Attain level of consensus as to the key elements of the way forward including the challenges that need to be tangled with
- Clear picture of the assets and attributes that the different participants bring to the new Design
At the end
of the Act Phase:
- Articulated landscape for what the ecosystem for social justice can look like
- Charter for a new WOW (way of working)
- Detailed framework on how the participants will work together and resource the way forward
- Individualized framework for each participant on specific collaboration opportunities in 2013
- Communication strategy to stakeholders
Throughout
the next days we broke up into about twelve groups meeting in “chat rooms”
formed by reconfigured whiteboards.
Each chat room was named for a mountain – Kailash, Shasta, Uluru, Sinai,
Fuji, Everest, Kilimanjaro, Table, Lookout, Machu Pichu, Everest, Ararat. Prominently displayed on a little shelf
at each whiteboard stood an iPad with the time on it: 30 minutes, counting down
by seconds until the ends of each session.
In addition
to the main meeting area and the various chat rooms, two prayer/meditation
rooms, one for women and one for men, adjoined the main open room, with doors
that could be closed.
We began in
a chat room considered to be our “home community.” This allowed us to talk with fewer people to begin to become
acquainted with each other and to know our primary areas of interest. We were given lists prepared by a
design team of nine (Caitlin
Breedlove, Carolyn Buck Luce,
Rob Evans, Rev.
Jacqueline Lewis, Rev. Michael-Ray Mathews, Rev. Alexia Salvatierra, Rev. John
Vaughn, Ari Wallach, and
Beth Zemsky), who decided on the
particular composition of each group.
With each change of topic and purpose, we participants were provided
with a paper indicating in which room we met and with whom; thus, groupings
changed.
For our
first chat rooms after we met with our home communities, we were free to choose
from among the following: Creating
“Collective” Impact; SONG – Bridge-Building for the Long Term; Evangelical
Immigration Table; Making Multi-Faith Work; Health Ecosystems The Soul of
Money; Growing Your Digital Village Elder; Making Something Go Viral; Scaling
Campaigns; Lessons from Faith Organizing for Marriage Equality; and Activating Millennials. Although there were several I found
compelling, I could only choose one, so I attended “Growing Your Digital
Village Elder.” Everything in this
talk by Carolyn Buck Luce I found informative; however, the strongest and most
helpful phrase used was “collaborative intelligence,” a form of understanding
that arises from the interactivity that digital communication fosters.
There’s so
much more to tell about this event.
I’m finding myself reviewing things in my mind and revising, expanding
and gaining new insights as I digest the experience. This is only the first of a series of blogs about MountainTop. Stay tuned for more.